10 lessons from a serial entrepreneur – Justin Kan, Atrium, YC, and Twitch
Dear readers,
The Serial Entrepreneur — investors want to back them, newbies want to learn from them, and people want to work on their teams. It turns out that, yes, being a repeat entrepreneur comes with big advantages, but there are difficulties too! And when you go through a tough experience like launching a new product, itās often the case that you want a ādo overā on many aspects. Of course, you try to fix them in your next attempt. What does a serial entrepreneur want to do better on their second, or third, or fourth try?
Well, letās ask Justin Kan, who has started many, many companies and has a point of view. In fact, 10 points of view. As many of you know, Justin is a repeat entrepreneur who co-founded Kiko Software (a Web 2.0 calendar that pre-dated Google Calendar by 4 years); Justin.tv (a lifecasting platform); Twitch.tv (a live streaming platform for esports, music, and other creatives now part of Amazon); Socialcam. He was also a partner at YC, and will be a dad soon! (congrats Justin!)
His new company, Atrium, is one of my first investments at Andreessen Horowitz. Itās a tech-enabled law firm serving startups — learn more here.
Justin reflects on his journey and shares 10 + 1 lesson heās learned along the way.
I wanted to add a quick summary of some of his points, as they are super interesting, and share with all of you. And for the lazy who donāt have time to watch a full interview, I added some notes below. Enjoy!
Thanks,
Andrew
The paradox of choice: choosing a focus
Justin says:
āOnce you see some success ā¦ The world opens up. They want you to be a VC, they want you to work on projects with them, you can start any company that you want, which is greatā¦ but itās a paradox of choice, and focus can be a huge problemā
This is the biggest, surprising thing about being a repeat entrepreneur, which is how easy it is to get pulled in a ton of directions. And also that you might not be as patient and let something develop, since your perceived opportunity cost is high. Justin ended up trying many different options — including as a partner of YC — and didnāt feel like he was learning/growing and the feedback cycle is too slow. Justin ended up picking a new startup because itās the #1 vehicle for personal growth.
Tradeoffs between B2B versus B2C companies
Justin says:
āWhen we started Kiko, we had no skills. I never had a full-time job in my life ā¦ We were not good. When you have nothing going for you except that you are willing to put in long hours, and blood sweat and tears, you should focus on market riskā¦ Now as someone with abilities and skills, you should focus on execution riskā
I often spend my time in the intersection of pure consumer startups and also consumerized enterprise, and notice that there are huge differences. One of the biggest ones is that B2B startups have relatively stable go-to-market motions — you have sales, marketing, and sell into buyers that you understand. Because of this, itās mostly about execution and if the market size is big enough. Consumer is fascinating because the distribution channels are constantly changing — 15 years ago, SEO and email viral growth was the big thing. Then 10 years ago, it was mobile and Facebook platform. Right now you are seeing a lot thatās just word of mouth or touching the IRL channel.
Market risk vs execution risk
Justin says:
āWhen Justin.tv pivoted to Twitch, no one believed there was a market. Even Emmett was skeptical. The good part was that competition was low. ā
And also:
āIt takes a lot of people with nothing to lose to discover [hit startups].ā
Iāve written about how random consumer products seem to be — the past decadeās hits were: An app that lets you get into strangersā cars. An app that lets you stay at random peoplesā houses. Disappearing photos. A site that doesnāt let you play video games, but you can watch other people play. Seriously? This is the Dumb Idea Paradox.
Fundraising strategy: go big or stay lean?
Justin says:
āIāve not convinced that raising a ton of money out of the gate is the right strategy. When you have a ton of money you spend a lot of money.ā
Nearly 10 years ago, Ben Horowitz wrote The Case for the Fat Startup — the idea that sometimes you need to raise a boatload of money in order to get your company off the ground. In Atriumās case, thatās exactly aligned, because the market wants a stable legal provider, and as an execution risk with clear competition, real capital has to go in to prove out the model.
Managing the stress of being a startup CEO (again!)
Justin says:
āI never really worked on self-improvement stuff outside of being a better programmer. But I never worked on anything to make myself smarter, or harder working, or alert more hours of the day. Everything was kind of accidental. If there was a problem in the company, I would be really emotionally avoidant to it.ā
The topic of mental health within a startup community has turned into a big deal — for good reason. Doing a startup is one of the most stressful things you can do in the age of cushy, white-collar jobs, and there havenāt been great ways to cope. Justin talks about his newfound focus on self-improvement, working with coaches, and speaking with his peers.
Seeking out mentors, coaches, and peers for help
Justin says:
āThe best part of Silicon Valley is that there are people here whoāve done it before, who are willing to help you.ā
And:
āI learn from [Emmett, his Twitch co-founder, his brother whoās cofounder of Cruise, and his friend Steve who runs Reddit]. The problems are actually all the same: I donāt have the right alignment among my team and I donāt have the right executive team. And itās always some variation of those things.ā
I mention in the interview that IMHO this is one of the best things about the Bay Area — itās a place focused on long-term relationships, and people help each other over the years. I met Justin over a decade ago and havenāt gotten the chance to work directly until now. And no matter where you are in the ecosystem there are always quite a few folks a step ahead, or a young up-and-comer who has a fresher take on things.
Intentionally designing a culture to avoid the pitfalls of āculture eating strategyā
Justin says:
āI had never asked myself, what is the kind of company I want to show up to work?ā
Thereās a saying that initially, a startup is about building a product that works — thatās the machine. But eventually you have to transition into building the machine that builds the machine — meaning company building, as opposed to product building. Culture is the core glue that holds everything together, and sometimes a startup idea is so strong that it works regardless of the culture. But it can be even more effective when it works.
Things heās still doing in his latest startupāand things heās doing very differently
Justin says:
āIterating quickly. Speed. Being helpful in the community.ā
Thereās some things that worked out great in a startup that are worth repeating. This is true when youāve seen some success, in particular. And there are some things that you want to change completely. Justin talks about the āYC ethosā of iterating quickly and leaning on speed. But as both a16z and his previous companies have done, he argues that itās important to help the community.
Managing higher expectations
Justin says:
āItās always a battle with the devil on your shoulder that says youāll never be good enough. And the way to win that battle is to internalize the idea that whatever happens, youāre gonna be fine. Youāre probably going to be the same — not happier or less happyā
When you read the academic research on happiness, one of the intriguing ideas is that people have a āset pointā for their level of happiness, and in general it doesnāt change much. If you get that, then it helps level out the ups and downs of something stressful. This is important to startups, of course, but also to many other things in life!
What heās reading and listening to
Justin says:
āIām reading a lot, because I deleted all the entertainment apps off my phone including the browser and I locked it so I canāt install new apps because I was a total phone addict.ā
He goes on to list:
- The Untethered Soul
- Leadership and Self-Deception
- The 15 Commitments of Conscious Leadership
- Joe Rogan Experience
Bonus: advice heād give his 20-year old self
Justin says:
āJoin Facebook. Self-improvement is a thing. Stop eating pizza. Things take time.ā
I, on the other hand, would encourage my 20 year old self to eat more pizza. Hope you enjoy the interview!
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